Where Biology Meets Psychology: Philosophical Essays

Front Cover
Valerie Gray Hardcastle
MIT Press, 1999 - Medical - 391 pages

A great deal of interest and excitement surround the interface between the philosophy of biology and the philosophy of psychology, yet the area is neither well defined nor well represented in mainstream philosophical publications. This book is perhaps the first to open a dialogue between the two disciplines. Its aim is to broaden the traditional subject matter of the philosophy of biology while informing the philosophy of psychology of relevant biological constraints and insights.The book is organized around six themes: functions and teleology, evolutionary psychology, innateness, philosophy of mind, philosophy of science, and parallels between philosophy of biology and philosophy of mind. Throughout, one finds overlapping areas of study, larger philosophical implications, and even larger conceptual ties. Woven through these connections are shared concerns about the status of semantics, scientific law, evolution and adaptation, and cognition in general.

Contributors
André Ariew, Mark A. Bedau, David J. Buller, Paul Sheldon Davies, Stephen M. Downes, Charbel Niño El-Hani, Owen Flanagan, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Todd Grantham, Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Gary Hatfield, Daniel W. McShea, Karen Neander, Shaun Nichols, Antonio Marcos Pereira, Tom Polger, Lawrence A. Shapiro, Kim Sterelny, Robert A. Wilson, William C. Wimsatt

 

Contents

Fitness and the Fate of Unicorns
3
A Pragmatic Approach
27
Valerie Gray Hardcastle University of Chicago
43
Ultimate Explanations and Panglossian
47
The Conflict of Evolutionary Psychology
67
Presence of Mind
83
Adaptation and Human
99
In Defense of a Developmental Account
117
Natural Answers to Natural Questions
221
Biology
251
Ontogeny Phylogeny and Scientific Development
273
Supple Laws in Psychology and Biology
287
Lessons from the Philosophy of Mind?
305
Understanding Biological Causation
333
Duke University
356
The Individual in Biology and Psychology
357

Department of Philosophy
136
Department of Philosophy
178
Situated Agency and the Descent of Desire
203

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1999)

Valerie Gray Hardcastle is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

Bibliographic information